Well, that's only one side of the coin. If your logical system can prove a negative you system is utter bollocks too.
The philosophical language games don't result from self-refutation. They result from equivocation.
There is thought.
But there is also experience.
There is also perception.
Oh. And consciousness.
Oh. And reason.
Which only begs the question. No, in fact - it begs a bunch of questions.
Is thought the same as or different from experience ?
Is thought the same as or different from perception?
Is perception the same as or different from consciousness?
Is reason the same as or different from thought?
...
...
In the language of semiotics: Are 'thought', 'experience', 'perception', 'consciousness' and 'reason' just different signifiers for the same signified?
In English: Are they synonyms?
In the language of metaphysics: How many things exist?
Do you answer it like the Existence-monists (1), dualists (2) or priority monists (many)?
The fidelity of your taxonomy can be quantified.
You were just arguing for that position.... by claiming that "experience is known" there's no room for "I". What gives?
But more than that. I am uttering the sentence.
I don't exist. I mean it - it's true. I am simply rejecting your static ontology in favour of a dynamic one.
The "I" is a consequence of many causes. The "I" is a cause of many consequences. The "I" is a series of events. The "I" is a temporal phenomenon that is difficult to define or capture in ontological-categorical language.
Are you saying that's not cogent? In what logic do you prove that negative?
juxtaposition. noun. the fact of two things being seen or placed close together with contrasting effect.
I am placing two things closely together - the concepts of 'thought' and 'experience'. Do you see a contrast?
In all the ways thought and experience are the same, how are they different?
in all the ways thought and experience are different, how are they the same?
Is thought an experience?
Is experience a thought?
Which comes first?